If it came from the factory with both cylinders, you shoot the ammo the cylinder was designed for.
It's talking about using every bullet in a revolver.
The bullet jammed in the gun's chamber. Come into my chamber and sit down.
No, it is not recommended to use a .357 bullet in a .38 Special revolver as the .357 bullet is longer and may not fit properly, potentially causing safety issues or damage to the firearm.
If it is chambered for it.
No.
No, the .22 cartridge is too small and will fall completely through the cylinder bore of a revolver, or entirely through the chamber and barrel of a semi-automatic pistol.
Yes.
No
By opening the action
In most circumstances, no. The bullet is too large to chamber in the handgun.
have a 9mm and my bullets keep getting stuck in chamber why..does it need cleaning or is there a problem with the gun
A revolver works by rotating a cylinder that holds multiple chambers, each loaded with a single cartridge. When the trigger is pulled, the hammer strikes the firing pin, igniting the primer in the cartridge, which fires the bullet. The cylinder then rotates, aligning a new chamber with the barrel, ready for the next shot.